If CA leaders wanted to prioritize a faster vote count, these are some of the policies they could implement:
-Ballots must be RECEIVED by Election Day. If you’re voting last minute, you have to vote in person or take your ballot to a county drop off spot. Then you wouldn’t need to wait 7 days to know how many ballots are needed to count
-Only mail ballots to voters who request them…not every registered voter. This would cut down on ballots being sent to bad addresses or the chances for ballot harvesting
-Send all registered voters free ID cards & require those cards for in person voting. Do not allow same day registration. This would likely cut down on provisional ballots that take longer to examine and process.
-Cut down the number of days to “cure” your ballot if there’s an issue from 10 to 5. This would allow for a faster certification date.
This would all speed up the count.
Could all of this lead to fewer people voting? Possibly.
Is the trade off worth it? That’s up to policy makers to determine.
A reminder: the current candidates for Gov. and Secretary of State have very different views on these issues.
@RollingStone Rolling Stone’s entire publication has been fueled by an unfathomable level of self-confidence, despite a data set that suggests it may not be good at anything.
Over 400,000 California families have lost their home insurance. Not because of anything they did wrong. Just dropped.
California needs a Commissioner who actually knows this industry from the inside out. Stacy Korsgaden does. Vote Stacy Korsgaden for California Insurance Commissioner on June 2.
#StacyForInsuranceCommissioner #CaliforniaInsurance #ProtectYourHome #CaliforniaForward #StacyKorsgaden #ProtectCalifornia
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
Former Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban has fulfilled the $10 million pledge that he made towards Montreal Children's Hospitals over a decade ago.
(via Montreal Gazzette)
If you gave away $126 billion to subsidize free flights between LA and San Francisco at current demand levels, you could fund roughly 150 to 200 years of travel before the money runs out.